Bug Juice

A new exhibit opens at the El Paso Museum of Art today. Titled The Red That Colored the World, the exhibit focuses on works of art the use a red dye derived from the cochineal insect.

Six hundred years ago, red dye was hard to come by in Europe. The invading Spaniards were surprised to find the Aztecs dressed in brilliant red cloth. By 1600, cochineal was New Spain’s second most valuable export behind silver.

In 2012, vegetarians and the squeamish were horrified to learn that Starbucks was using cochineal dye in their strawberry frappuccinos.

Cochineal insects like to live on nopal cactus. You can find some variety on cactus pads here in El Paso. They’re little white patches that look like spit wads. Scrape one off and rub it between your fingers and you’ll create a red smear.

The exhibit at the Museum of Art runs through August 20. For more information, visit the museum’s website or call (915)212-0300.

Cochineal image by Frank Vincentz – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Link

2 comments

  1. I don’t have to travel to the museum to see bug juice because all l have to do is drive really fast. How stupid does a semi primitive society have to be that wearing squished bugs on their garments was fashionable?

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